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Three BlackRock fixed-income closed-end funds experienced notable declines in their quality rankings this week, pushing each into the market's bottom decile for operational efficiency and financial health. This shift comes as U.S. Treasury yields have been declining, causing changes across the credit markets.
According to the Benzinga Edge’s Stock Ranking methodology, the quality score is a percentile-based measure that evaluates a fund's operational efficiency and financial health on a relative basis, factoring in historical profitability and key fundamental indicators compared to peers.
The marked deterioration across these three BlackRock funds, namely, BlackRock Credit Allocation Income Trust (NYSE:BTZ), BlackRock Debt Strategies Fund Inc. (NYSE:DSU), and BlackRock Corporate High Yield Fund Inc. (NYSE:HYT), underscores the current challenges plaguing credit sectors, exposing vulnerabilities just as traditional safe havens lose favor amid fluctuating yields.
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With all three funds now ranking among the market's lowest deciles for quality, investors may seek alternatives that offer stronger balance sheet resilience and higher fundamental quality in an increasingly selective and challenging market landscape.
The 10-year Treasury bond yielded 4.03% and the two-year bond was at 3.53%. Whereas the long-term 30-year bond was yielding 4.65% as of the publication of this article.
The SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSE:SPY) and Invesco QQQ Trust ETF (NASDAQ:QQQ), which track the S&P 500 index and Nasdaq 100 index, respectively, rose in premarket on Tuesday. The SPY was up 0.18% at $662.10, while the QQQ advanced 0.29% to $593.40, according to Benzinga Pro data.
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Disclaimer: This content was partially produced with the help of AI tools and was reviewed and published by Benzinga
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